Alan craned his neck to see a pair of bearded neohippies in rasta hats.
2
He was also so pronouncedly Caucasian that he made Duke Nukem look like a rasta.
3
The rasta who has been at every one of Brooks's court appearances quietly ticks her off.
4
I bought another pair, but had to settle for the rasta-colored ones because they were out of blue.
5
I asked, using the rasta term for the sins of this world represented by the Hiltons and everything they stood for.
6
But in fairness to the west-of-Ireland rasta, he has assembled a pretty crack band of reggae musicians to accompany him here.
7
His green rasta cap hung from one of his little goat horns, and his fake feet had been knocked off his hooves.
8
Dreadlocks and rasta caps are overrepresented among the crowd, and reggae music pumps through air thick with the sweet smell of marijuana.
9
He makes the lyrics live, and, incidentally, acquits the rasta of all charges of male chauvinism in this sensitive paean to black womanhood.
10
His horns had grown at least an inch, so he now had to wear his rasta cap all the time to pass as human.
11
After the roots reggae and righteous rasta soundtracks of the 1970s, dancehall was a tougher proposition, as producers experimented with digital instruments and processes.
12
Booze, brats, and babes (there's even a bonfire with logs and two guys with a rasta flag have set up a still).
13
Like when I first hear rasta drumming, I think it something terrible going to do with me, because it's something that we no understand.
14
He wore a green rasta-style cap, because when it rained his curly hair flattened and you could just see the tips of his horns.
15
I am pleased to know that the remaining two marches will be, in the words of my Coolies over "uch'-cha rasta," a good road.
16
Morans learn to weave hair into thin, rasta-like dreadlocks during the initiation, which takes place when boys are aged between 17 and 20.